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October Moon at Perigee

The Moon reaches perigee, (minimum distance from Earth), this month on Sunday October 16th. At that time the Moon will more or less be at a distance of 28.05 Earth diameters (357,861 km or 222,364 miles) from the Earth.
The Moon reaches perigee Sunday at 23:47 UT (6:47 pm CDT) and this is less than 20 hours after it was at full Moon phase also on Sunday but at 4:23 UT, (11:23 pm CDT October 15th). Since the full Moon is this close to its closest to the Earth for this orbit the full Moon could be considered one of the ‘Super Moons’ this year.
Does our Moon actually go around the Earth as this graphic shows? From our perspective on the Earth the Moon appears to circle around the Earth. However, in reality, the Moon orbits the Sun together with the Earth*

On the day of the lunar perigee the 16-day old just past full waning gibbous Moon rises at around sunset local time and is over the southwest horizon at sunrise the following morning. Two of the Dwarf planets, Eris and Ceres are near the Moon but due to their respective apparent magnitudes (Ceres 7.0; Eris 18.6) and the bright reflected light from the Moon the two are all but invisible. Interestingly these two represent two similar but very different types of Dwarf Planets – Ceres is within the main asteroid belt at a distance of 1.9 AU (176,616,033 miles; 284,235,954 km) while Eris is in the outer regions of the solar system at a distance of 95 AU (8,830,801,690 miles; 14,211,797,715 km) from the Earth.